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Falling Victim to Wasps in the Air: A Fate Driven by Prey Flight Morphology?

In prey-predator systems where the interacting individuals are both fliers, the flight performance of both participants heavily influences the probability of success of the predator (the prey is captured) and of the prey (the predator is avoided). While the flight morphology (an estimate of flight p...

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Autores principales: Ballesteros, Yolanda, Polidori, Carlo, Tormos, José, Baños-Picón, Laura, Asís, Josep D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4821532/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27046238
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0152256
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author Ballesteros, Yolanda
Polidori, Carlo
Tormos, José
Baños-Picón, Laura
Asís, Josep D.
author_facet Ballesteros, Yolanda
Polidori, Carlo
Tormos, José
Baños-Picón, Laura
Asís, Josep D.
author_sort Ballesteros, Yolanda
collection PubMed
description In prey-predator systems where the interacting individuals are both fliers, the flight performance of both participants heavily influences the probability of success of the predator (the prey is captured) and of the prey (the predator is avoided). While the flight morphology (an estimate of flight performance) of predatory wasps has rarely been addressed as a factor that may contribute to explain prey use, how the flight morphology of potential prey influences the output of predator-prey encounters has not been studied. Here, we hypothesized that flight morphology associated with flight ability (flight muscle mass to body mass ratio (FMR) and body mass to wing area ratio (wing loading, WL)) of Diptera affect their probability of being captured by specialized Diptera-hunting wasps (Bembix merceti and B. zonata), predicting a better manoeuvrability and acceleration capacity achieved by higher FMR and lower WL, and flight speed achieved by higher WL. In addition, wasp species with better flight morphology should be less limited by an advantageous Diptera flight morphology. Overall, the abundance of dipterans in the environment explained an important part of the observed variance in prey capture rate. However, it was not the only factor shaping prey capture. First, higher prey abundance was associated with greater capture rate for one species (B. merceti), although not for the other one. Second, the interaction observed between the environmental dipteran availability and dipteran WL for B. zonata suggests that greater dipteran WL (this probably meaning high cruising speed) decreased the probability of being captured, as long as fly abundance was high in the environment. Third, greater dipteran FMR (which likely means high manoeuvrability and acceleration capacity) helped to reduce predation by B. merceti if, again, dipterans were abundant in the environment. Wasp WL only varied with body mass but not between species, thereby hardly accounting for inter-specific differences in the wasps’ predatory patterns. However, the greater FMR of B. zonata, which implies better flight performance and greater load-lifting capacity, may explain why the capture rate in the two wasp species is affected by different factor interactions. In conclusion, although prey availability remains the primary factor shaping prey use, prey flight morphology seems to gain an additional role under conditions of abundant prey, when wasps can avoid flies with better flight ability.
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spelling pubmed-48215322016-04-22 Falling Victim to Wasps in the Air: A Fate Driven by Prey Flight Morphology? Ballesteros, Yolanda Polidori, Carlo Tormos, José Baños-Picón, Laura Asís, Josep D. PLoS One Research Article In prey-predator systems where the interacting individuals are both fliers, the flight performance of both participants heavily influences the probability of success of the predator (the prey is captured) and of the prey (the predator is avoided). While the flight morphology (an estimate of flight performance) of predatory wasps has rarely been addressed as a factor that may contribute to explain prey use, how the flight morphology of potential prey influences the output of predator-prey encounters has not been studied. Here, we hypothesized that flight morphology associated with flight ability (flight muscle mass to body mass ratio (FMR) and body mass to wing area ratio (wing loading, WL)) of Diptera affect their probability of being captured by specialized Diptera-hunting wasps (Bembix merceti and B. zonata), predicting a better manoeuvrability and acceleration capacity achieved by higher FMR and lower WL, and flight speed achieved by higher WL. In addition, wasp species with better flight morphology should be less limited by an advantageous Diptera flight morphology. Overall, the abundance of dipterans in the environment explained an important part of the observed variance in prey capture rate. However, it was not the only factor shaping prey capture. First, higher prey abundance was associated with greater capture rate for one species (B. merceti), although not for the other one. Second, the interaction observed between the environmental dipteran availability and dipteran WL for B. zonata suggests that greater dipteran WL (this probably meaning high cruising speed) decreased the probability of being captured, as long as fly abundance was high in the environment. Third, greater dipteran FMR (which likely means high manoeuvrability and acceleration capacity) helped to reduce predation by B. merceti if, again, dipterans were abundant in the environment. Wasp WL only varied with body mass but not between species, thereby hardly accounting for inter-specific differences in the wasps’ predatory patterns. However, the greater FMR of B. zonata, which implies better flight performance and greater load-lifting capacity, may explain why the capture rate in the two wasp species is affected by different factor interactions. In conclusion, although prey availability remains the primary factor shaping prey use, prey flight morphology seems to gain an additional role under conditions of abundant prey, when wasps can avoid flies with better flight ability. Public Library of Science 2016-04-05 /pmc/articles/PMC4821532/ /pubmed/27046238 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0152256 Text en © 2016 Ballesteros et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ballesteros, Yolanda
Polidori, Carlo
Tormos, José
Baños-Picón, Laura
Asís, Josep D.
Falling Victim to Wasps in the Air: A Fate Driven by Prey Flight Morphology?
title Falling Victim to Wasps in the Air: A Fate Driven by Prey Flight Morphology?
title_full Falling Victim to Wasps in the Air: A Fate Driven by Prey Flight Morphology?
title_fullStr Falling Victim to Wasps in the Air: A Fate Driven by Prey Flight Morphology?
title_full_unstemmed Falling Victim to Wasps in the Air: A Fate Driven by Prey Flight Morphology?
title_short Falling Victim to Wasps in the Air: A Fate Driven by Prey Flight Morphology?
title_sort falling victim to wasps in the air: a fate driven by prey flight morphology?
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4821532/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27046238
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0152256
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